Enoch A. Curtis Explained
Enoch A. Curtis (1836–1907) was an American architect practicing in Fredonia, New York during the nineteenth century.
Life and career
Enoch Arnold Curtis was born July 19, 1836, in Busti, New York to Isaac Curtis, a farmer, and Susan (Hunter) Curtis. He was raised on the farm, educated in the academy at Jamestown, and trained as a carpenter. In 1862 he enlisted in the 112th New York Infantry Regiment of the Union Army and was commissioned a captain. He was heavily injured during the Battle of Cold Harbor in 1864, and was honorably discharged due to his wounds. He settled in Fredonia, and while recovering he ran a hardware business and took up the study of architecture.[1] In 1867 he opened an office as an architect.[2] Curtis practiced in Fredonia for a period of forty years. In 1888 he formed the firm of Curtis & Archer with William H. Archer, which was dissolved in 1890 when Archer moved to Buffalo. He later had a successful practice in Canada.[3] Curtis frequently drew from pattern books for his designs.[2]
In 1896 Curtis was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in St. Louis which nominated William McKinley for president, and was an active figure in the ensuing successful campaign. In 1901, following the assassination of McKinley, Curtis was appointed a member of the committee in charge of the design and construction of the McKinley Monument in Buffalo, designed by Carrère & Hastings and dedicated a month prior to his death in 1907.
Curtis joined the Western Association of Architects in 1888, which merged with the American Institute of Architects in 1889, though he only remained a member of the AIA until 1891.[4]
Personal life
Though he was discharged as a major, in 1867 he was brevetted a major by Governor Reuben Fenton.[1]
Curtis was married in 1855 to Mary Jane Elizabeth Norton of Ashville, New York, and they had two daughters. Curtis died October 4, 1907, in Fredonia.[5]
Legacy
From his office in Fredonia, Curtis built extensively in western New York and Pennsylvania. At least four buildings designed by Curtis, alone and with Archer, have been listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places. Several others contribute to listed historic districts.
Architectural works
- American (IOOF) Block, 5–15 E Main St, Fredonia, New York (1869–70)[2]
- Jairus H. Winsor house, 314 Union St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1871, demolished)[6]
- German Reformed Church (former), 102 Brook St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1872)[6]
- Elm Street School (former), 617 W Elm St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1873)[6]
- Emlenton Presbyterian Church, 508 Main St, Emlenton, Pennsylvania (1874)[6]
- Bradford Oil Exchange Building, 33 Main St, Bradford, Pennsylvania (1878, altered)[6]
- Aaron O. Putnam house, 134 Temple St, Fredonia, New York (1878)[2]
- Horace White house, 3728 NY-83, Laona, New York (circa 1878)[2]
- Titusville Oil Exchange Building, 128 W Spring St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1880–81, demolished 1956)[6]
- Benjamin Brundred house, 315 W 1st St, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1883)[6]
- Reuben Gridley Wright Farm Complex, 233 E Main St, Westfield, New York (1883, NRHP 1983)
- Christ Episcopal Church, 16 Central Ave, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1886–87)[7]
- First Presbyterian Church, 216 N Franklin St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1887)[6]
- Christ's Church, 206 Seneca St, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1889–90 and 1896, NRHP 1978)[7] 122 N Maple Ave, Greensburg, Pennsylvania (1889–91)[8]
- National Transit Building and Annex, 206 Seneca St, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1889–90 and 1896, NRHP 1978)[7]
- Belmont Hotel, 40–48 Schuyler St, Belmont, New York (1890, NRHP 2001)
- Oil City City Hall, 248 Seneca St, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1890, demolished)[9]
- Reuting Block, 122 W Spring St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1890)[6]
- Fredonia Village Hall and Opera House, 9 Church St, Fredonia, New York (1891)
- Joseph Seep house, 304 W Main St, Titusville, Pennsylvania (1891, demolished)[6]
- Grace United Methodist Church, 100 Central Ave, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1892–95)[6]
- Oil City Hospital, 174 E Bissell Ave, Oil City, Pennsylvania (1893–94, demolished)[10]
- Bradford Old City Hall, 23 Kennedy St, Bradford, Pennsylvania (1897 and 1902, NRHP 1976)[11] [12]
- Ahira Hall Memorial Library, 37 W Main St, Brocton, New York (1903–05)[13]
Notes and References
- "Major Enoch A. Curtis" in Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Chautauqua County, New York, ed. Butler F. Dilley (Philadelphia: John M. Gresham & Company, 1891): 133.
- Daniel D. Reiff, Houses from Books: Treatises, Pattern Books and Catalogs in American Architecture, 1738–1950: A History and Guide (University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2000): 100–105.
- http://dictionaryofarchitectsincanada.org/node/53 Archer, William Henry
- https://aiahistoricaldirectory.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/AHDAA/pages/36874620/ahd1009665 AIA records for E. A. Curtis
- "Norton" in Genealogical and Family History of Western New York 1, ed. William Richard Cutter (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1912): 210–213
- William B. Moore and Joshua F. Sherretts, Oil Boom Architecture: Titusville, Pithole and Petroleum Center (Charleston: Arcadia Publishing, 2008)
- Lu Donnelly, H. David Brumble IV and Franklin Toker, Buildings of Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2010)
- Churchman 58, no. 20 (November 17, 1888): 614–615.
- Engineering and Building Record 22, no. 3 (June 21, 1890): 47.
- Charitable Institutions of Pennsylvania (Harrisburg: Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1898)
- Engineering News 37, no. 13 (April 1, 1897): 117.
- Engineering Record 45, no. 11 (March 15, 1902): 262.
- Real Estate Record and Builders Guide 71, no. 1837 (May 30, 1903): 1081.